Paediatrician Warns Against Using Antifungal as Body Cream

According to her, mixing drugs like Funbact A and Skineal with baby body creams is not healthy for the skin, especially for babies.

An Ilorin, Kwara State-based paediatrician, Dr. Khadijat Ajadi, has warned against the use of antifungal creams mixed with baby body creams to bleach the skin of babies.

Ajadi told the News Agency of Nigeria on Tuesday in Ilorin that antifungal creams were medications and not body creams.

According to her, mixing drugs like Funbact A and Skineal with baby body creams is not healthy for the skin, especially for babies.

Ajadi said: “The rate at which some mothers do this now is alarming and they even prescribe it to others openly.

“I want them to stop because these are drugs with dangerous side effects.

“The side effects include steroids which are easily absorbed into the bloodstream from the fragile skin of the newborns and babies.

“These lead to serious side effects on the long terms including gastritis (stomach ulcers), wounds, poor growth and other sinister side effects.

“If mothers religiously go through the packs of some of these medicated creams, words like: ‘antifungal’, ‘antibacterial’, ‘anti-inflammatory’ are written on them.

“The constituents are drugs including: antibiotics, antifungal and steroids and they are often prescribed for specific skin diseases and usually for a short duration and not usually more than two weeks.”

The paediatrician noted that the problem with some mothers was the ‘craziness’ to have fair skin babies.

She said: “A lot of women are carried away by the desire for their babies to be fair, not knowing the dangers inherent in this dangerous practice.

“There is more to having a fair baby, most babies are born fair but that does not mean they will remain fair.

“Those with genetic makeup to be black will still be black irrespective of any concoctions applied or bleaching creams.”

She, however, encouraged mothers to embrace the use of natural products for children.